My summer is measured by the blog entries here. I started this blog to encourage me to write more and to get over my dread of putting my ideas in the public domain. While my steadfast obsession with psychopharmacology and gender is unwavering, the direction of this blog has shifted as I entered into a new phase of my life.
I received tenure last January, which, to those who have been through it is a deep sigh of relief. One of the many questions that people ask you after you've been through tenure is: "So, now what are you going to do with your life"? I mostly ignored this question, since I figured I would do exactly what I always do: research, write, publish articles, design new classes, participate in faculty seminars, travel to conferences, etc. In fact, I was thinking far more about how to get my book done during my sabbatical (which, unfortunately, will be only one semester!).
However, the blog has forced me to recognize that I have done something quite different with my life this summer. I have joined a church (Unitarian Universalism), formed a local NOW chapter, joined a friday group of beer lovers at a local pub, participated in the local farmer's market and, most importantly, met many new friends, who have nothing to do with my academic life.
The single force animating what I take to be a dramatic change in my existence in this tiny town is my commitment to feminism. Somehow, without any sort of "epiphany," I realized that I lived in this town. I own a house, I have a permanent job. Unless a big University in some city I treasure comes knocking on my door with a great offer, I will live her for the next 30 years. The only connection I have to this place is through the College, and that existence is rather surreal. I know that I am surrounded by a community of people who share my views--for the most part--about the world. I also find my colleagues to be fascinating, illuminating, and, well, let's face it, sort of disconnected from the world.
Many of us are hiding out in academia, it feels like a safe place to be in a world that is transfiguring into a sort of worst-case science fiction novel. If you read my local paper, and start drinking beers with locals--both of which I started to do this summer--you are struck by how foreign our views are.
Just to give you some ideas of what I mean: Early in the summer I met Uncle Ben, a retired 5th grade school teacher, who is also a 18th Century re-enactor. Uncle Ben is an unapologetic, unreconstructed Fox-News-loving, Rush-Limbaugh-inhaling Right Winger. The first time I met him, he told me that all the homeless people in the world are just plain lazy and unwilling to read the classified section and get a job.
Ben and I started having regular political conversations. Each week we both prepare for topics and we look forward to duking it out over micro-brewed beer. I like Ben. In fact, he is the sort of person you invite to your wedding and expect him to get up and make a delightful avuncular toast. Yesterday, Ben and some other folks of the Friday Beer group pledged to support the upcoming Chili Cook Off that our NOW chapter entered. However, Ben made it clear to me several times that he didn't want anyone to know he was coming since NOW was clearly a pack of man-hating women who snub any woman who might choose to raise children. I asked him why he believed this of NOW, since he was talking to the President and I had never said any of those things to him, nor behaved that way before. He assured me that he heard Gloria Steinem say that.
Another example of the "real world"--what Ben likes to call the "common sense" view that most people from my county have: I was sitting at the NOW table in the square today, when an older man walked up to our table and starting looking at the bumper stickers. We have one that reads: "The Last Time We Mixed Religion and Politics . . .People We're Burned at the Stake!" The man picked it up, laughed, and said, "yea, that was the good ole days. That was what BBQ's were all about." I am NOT making this up. He then asked me why we weren't starting a National Organization for Men. Luckily, he walked off without any further insult.
The Letters to the Editor of my paper contain countless letters of people who praise the gentility and likeability of Rick Santorum. I wrote an op-ed this summer about Santorum, sent it to the editor, and he wouldn't even respond to my inquiries (I published it somewhere else).
Here is the rub. Those of us who find the powers that be horrific, like I do, or, those of us who are outraged by abstinence-only education, intelligent design, privatization of social security, or the Fox Newsification of the world, better get out of the safety of the Ivory Tower quickly. And, once we do, like I have been doing all summer, be prepared to hear how you are "out of touch," "living in a bubble," "think you are so much smarter than everyone else," "man-hater," "secular humanist," or, the staple "Lib-errr--raaaalll." The pundits, the partisan media hacks, the conservative strategists have been working on your local community (if you live somewhere like me) and already packaged and sold you to everyone else.
What is the result? They don't listen to you---at first. They think they know your positions, your looney, wacky ideas, your "do-gooder" or "bleeding heart." But, they don't. And, if you sit and talk to people, like I have a lot this summer, you find out that they don't even really agree with the positions that they supposedly have.
We have our work cut out. And, I am starting to transition back into academic mode--syllabi, readings, meetings, and committee work. I am not sure how I will keep up this work in the community I am doing and continue to be a good teacher. But, I have to do it.
It's not fun work. In fact, its downright scary and demoralizing when you start to really see what you look like to those outside of our intellectual communities. I constantly panic that I am going to get hurt, or that my reputation will be maligned, or that I will be disowned by my neighbors. I am not even doing a tenth of the brave work that Cindy Sheehan is doing, and I am sacred.
Technorati Tags: activism, feminism, academia
I'm in support of all that you are saying, Aspazia, including the frustration with academics (only some) who "tune out" not only from fear but from fear-induced snobbery.
ReplyDeleteBut I also want to point out that the liberal=academic/"real world"=conservative distinction is only a distinction in conservative places. We hang out around here so long we forget that there are plenty of liberals (or at least not right-wingers) all over the place who are not academics! Remember, there are strong arguments that Bush did not win the first election, and there is strong evidence of voter interference in Ohio (see the NY Times op-eds yesterday)--and Bush only won by a tiny margin....very low for a sitting president. And your own point that you make here is that the NOW chapter is made up of women who are NOT academics. Plus, take a trip up to the "big city" sometime--you know, the one 45 minutes north? not the other big cities near here--and you will find lots of liberals, even in this pretty conservative area. DON'T LET THE CONSERVATIVE "COMMON SENSE-ERS" sell you this cheap bag of goods. There are plenty of non-academic liberals, and if we can just get a political party with cahones, we might actually get something accomplished as the Republicans begin their own version of in-fighting.
WE ARE NOT ALONE.
Uncle Ben--
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the discussion. I am sure that many hear will be delighted by your contributions!
Gburgkid and I--
I agree that we aren't aloof as the conservatives say. I guess what I am getting at is the fear aspect. Frankly, I would rather hang out with my friends from academia during these times, because at least I know I don't have to have a discussion about why feminists are man-haters or that intelligent design is a plausible theory. But, I can't stay in that safe place all of the time!
And, it is seriously frightening to set up a feminist table in the middle of the town square.
Antheia--
I look forward to your new post!!!! Do tell. Aren't beauty salons great places for conversation?
Aspazia...have no fear.
ReplyDeleteAs I told you the other day, I grew up in a small southwestern Pa town probably more conservative than Gettysburg and a hell of a lot less friendly. It seems to be that unless you break a bottle in the bar and threaten to stick someone, you have nothing to fear. As for your reputation...who's going to think badly of you for expressing your ideas and concerns besides the ones who already think badly of you for even having ideas and concerns that conflict with theirs? You'd be going from an already assumed bad reputation with these people to, well, the same thing. And I can't imagine your academic friends being stupid enough to what? Think badly of you for socializing with the locals? Silly thought.
There is nothing to fear. But then, this is coming from someone who repeatedly puts herself out there, regardless of the repercussions--usually to be insulted and demeaned. It's because I feel I have nothing to fear. And I have a fairly strong sense of my convictions.
I'll go to the pub with you and be your bodyguard. :)
Thanks Kriscinda! I love it, a bodyguard. Luckily, this crowd that I drink with is great. I need a body guard far more often when I am out in public doing my feministing!
ReplyDelete